police rhetoric, the protest, i have a president who gives officers a sense of pride, they do their job much better. heather: we can look at statistics in 2018. we know that 40 police officers have been shot and killed in the line of duty compared to last year, 35 police officers shot and killed and one thing the president talked about was chicago. he will send his attorney general to try to lower the crime statistics and one thing he wants to bring back is the stop and frisk policy. is that a good idea? the narrative being touted in connection from one place to the next, this goes back to a landmark decision referred to as terry versus ohio which allows law enforcement officers to conduct the, quote, stop and frisk, this could be nationally applied as it relates to the
does sound like the thing you re going to be able to control quickly on the law enforcement front. you re a sheriff, county wide official. does that mean, are you going to look for money to hire more cops on the streets? what does it mean? i m curious, do you favor programs like stop and frisk? i know the mayor of philadelphia is somebody who would like that tactic, though not to do it via profiling. you know, stop and frisk has always been the law since terry versus ohio was announced by the u.s. supreme court but it has to be based on a reasonable suspicion that a person is engaged in some form of activity that is criminal or has been in criminal activity or about to do it. so stop and frisk has been the law for a long time. you should not profile people or stop people without a reason. i ll never support that. as a lawyer, i don t think it s legal to randomly stop people without cause so we have to do it based on some reasonable suspicion people are engaged in activity. but yo
there s no way to connect that with these discriminatory practices. when they started these police tactics, the murder rate went down dramatically and immediately as soon as they were implemented. there s a direct correlation. as soon as they started it, murder rates went down. crime went down. now he would suggest that if we go back from that that they would start up again. why would that not make sense to you? let s talk about what going back from that means, sean. nothing about this ruling gets rid of stop and frisk. it gets rid of discriminatory effect we see it being used in new york city today. you can spin it any way you want. angela? the judge said it was unconstitutional. if you look at the two cases which was ruled by the supreme court, terry versus ohio, as late as 2009 you had arizona versus johnson that proved that stop and frisk does not impede
there s no way to connect that with these discriminatory practices. when they started these police tactics, the murder rate went down dramatically and immediately as soon as they were implemented. there s a direct correlation. as soon as they started it, murder rates went down. crime went down. now he would suggest that if we go back from that that they would start up again. why would that not make sense to you? let s talk about what going back from that means, sean. nothing about this ruling gets rid of stop and frisk. it gets rid of discriminatory effect we see it being used in new york city today. you can spin it any way you want. angela? the judge said it was unconstitutional. if you look at the two cases which was ruled by the supreme court, terry versus ohio, as late as 2009 you had arizona versus johnson that proved that stop and frisk does nothe fourt
wedge, this is making us less safe, it s making our kids not just fear the robbers but fear the cops. and so, they re afraid to go and talk to you when they need to go and talk to you. he s just way off base. this is the largest racial profiling and this last point. he said this is not a program. it is a program. stop, question and frisk was introduced by mayor giuliani right after the terry versus ohio decision as a specific program in the city. under giuliani, we saw about 80,000 per year, stop and frisks, this racial profiling program. under bloomberg, in 2011, we have about 680,000, 90% innocent, 90% people of color, and get this, 99.9% don t have a gun. about 700 guns seized. the wider point, sybrina fulton, i welcome you to the program. just your reaction as a mother who s lost her son so tragically and as now someone who s trying to create something positive out of that searing loss by talking